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#hiroshiyoshimura — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #hiroshiyoshimura, aggregated by home.social.

  1. I don't know anything about this musician, but I bookmarked someone's toot the other day because the pink of this album cover matches my new glasses, and then the stars aligned and I actually went back into my bookmarks and saw that pink again. It sounds like spring, and is apparently the first official reissue for an album recorded in 1987 but then only posthumously released in 2003.

    Hiroshi Yoshimura - Flora (1987/2003)

    hiroshi-yoshimura.bandcamp.com

    #HiroshiYoshimura #EnvironmentalMusic #ambient

  2. I don't know anything about this musician, but I bookmarked someone's toot the other day because the pink of this album cover matches my new glasses, and then the stars aligned and I actually went back into my bookmarks and saw that pink again. It sounds like spring, and is apparently the first official reissue for an album recorded in 1987 but then only posthumously released in 2003.

    Hiroshi Yoshimura - Flora (1987/2003)

    hiroshi-yoshimura.bandcamp.com

    #HiroshiYoshimura #EnvironmentalMusic #ambient

  3. I don't know anything about this musician, but I bookmarked someone's toot the other day because the pink of this album cover matches my new glasses, and then the stars aligned and I actually went back into my bookmarks and saw that pink again. It sounds like spring, and is apparently the first official reissue for an album recorded in 1987 but then only posthumously released in 2003.

    Hiroshi Yoshimura - Flora (1987/2003)

    hiroshi-yoshimura.bandcamp.com

    #HiroshiYoshimura #EnvironmentalMusic #ambient

  4. I've been taking a deep dive into Kankyō Ongaku! While I was previously familiar with a few 80s #Japanese #ambient #music albums, such as those by #HaruomiHosono & #HiroshiYoshimura, I didn't know all that much about how they came about. That's now changed after listening to the excellent #BBC radio doco "Tranquility Inc - The Great New Ambient Wave" by Elizabeth Alker (who hosts the well worth checking out weekly show Unclassified). Besides being an alternate non-western thread of ambient / environmental music, the relationship between commercial interests and art was very different to what we're used to - more like renaissance art patrons than the consumer-oriented "product" of today. Well worth checking out! https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/m000xdwh

  5. The lockdown broke me. And the reason it broke me was because I got to experience my perfect day. And I got to experience it repeatedly:

    At the time I had maybe $9000. My rent was $750 a month. I was unemployed (though heavily paid the #ADHDTax by not applying for unemployment). I had managed to secure some staples (especially flour. I've always been a baker, and when I saw the way the bread section looked at Market Basket I wandered over to the baking section and bought 20lbs of flour and figured I'd be able to keep myself fed and entertained for a bit.) So my emotional state was calm. We just needed to ride this thing out, I have food, I have money, there's nothing I can really do right now but chill the fuck out. And I did. I never do that.

    I'd wake up in the morning and brew myself a pot of tea. As it steeped I'd fold up my bed and sit in the middle of the tatami my bed was on in my attic bedroom. I'd turn on my stereo I had scavenged and pick an album. I had just started exploring ambient music. This morning I pick Green by #HiroshiYoshimura. I pour myself a cup of tea and bask in the sun streaming through my skylight. As I blow across the tea I watch the ongoing drama at the bird feeder I had installed to the window a few weeks ago after a bout of hyper-fixation on bird watching. Three mourning doves have become regulars, and they are the dumbest birds I've ever seen. They are much too big for this feeder, and they are too dumb to take turns, so all three of them try to perch and end up shoving each other off and begin a perpetually cascading fountain of feather, coos, and struggle as they keep unseating each other. A pair of nuthatches watch, frustrated from the large tree just outside my window. I finish the album and still have tea left. The temperature is mild so I climb out our front window onto the roof with a blanket and a book and sit. I don't read much and instead watch folks walking up and down the middle of the street, commenting on this odd new liberty in our ongoing apocalypse. I decide I want to be a little closer to these conversations so I walk down to the front porch and set up my hammock. I make myself a grilled cheese and another pot of tea and sit in the hammock while I continue to people watch. My street had never been this interesting before... or maybe I've just never had time to observe it. Eventually I decide I should maybe move or something so I get my bike out and go for a ride. There are no cars. Cycling has never been this enjoyable before. I bike smack down the middle of Elm Street, my hand's behind my head as I stretch in the sun and look around at the new, slow pace life has taken on. I pedal lazily through the streets of Somerville and up the minuteman until I get to the meadows and do a little bit of languid trail riding. When I find a quiet spot I set up my hammock again and just rock and listen. As the temperature drops I make my way home. I make myself dinner and split a beer with my roommate while I watch him play Skyrim and we banter. Eventually he turns in and I make a pot of herbal tea and sit on the roof wrapped in a blanket and watch the neighborhood around me settle down for the evening. I hear people coughing, and I shiver. It's time to head inside.

    I recognize this was a scary, awful time for so many people, as it was that for me as well. I was lucky that no one in my circle had contracted it, and I wasn't actively wrapped in anxiety or mourning over anyone I knew. That being said, I had never taken a vacation before in my life, and I think this was the closest I've ever been. There was nothing I could do in those days, nothing was expected of me, so I just... vibed. It was something I've never experienced before in my life, and I wish I could just have an hour like that each day. That shouldn't be too much to ask, but these days it's always just out of reach. I got to taste the good life, and slowly that's been taken away from me piece by piece as we "return to normal.

    #WeatherIsHappening #ClimateCrisis #IWW #antiwork #ADHD #greencollargrunt #greenwashing #greenwash #LateStageCapitalism #Sisyphean

  6. ❝ Characterized by a spare electronic palette and carefully arranged synthesizers, [kankyo ongaku]’s minimalism stood in contrast to the rampant consumerism of the time. As the fluorescent colors of arcade houses and anime films illuminated the country, [Hiroshi] Yoshimura rendered his work in earth tones. ❞ → bowdoinorient.com/2022/04/22/t

    #AmbientMusic #JapaneseMusic #KankyoOngaku #HiroshiYoshimura #EnvironmentalMusic #minimalism

    GREEN 🎧 → hiroshiyoshimura.bandcamp.com/

  7. ❝ Characterized by a spare electronic palette and carefully arranged synthesizers, [kankyo ongaku]’s minimalism stood in contrast to the rampant consumerism of the time. As the fluorescent colors of arcade houses and anime films illuminated the country, [Hiroshi] Yoshimura rendered his work in earth tones. ❞ → bowdoinorient.com/2022/04/22/t

    #AmbientMusic #JapaneseMusic #KankyoOngaku #HiroshiYoshimura #EnvironmentalMusic #minimalism

    GREEN 🎧 → hiroshiyoshimura.bandcamp.com/

  8. ❝ Characterized by a spare electronic palette and carefully arranged synthesizers, [kankyo ongaku]’s minimalism stood in contrast to the rampant consumerism of the time. As the fluorescent colors of arcade houses and anime films illuminated the country, [Hiroshi] Yoshimura rendered his work in earth tones. ❞ → bowdoinorient.com/2022/04/22/t

    #AmbientMusic #JapaneseMusic #KankyoOngaku #HiroshiYoshimura #EnvironmentalMusic #minimalism

    GREEN 🎧 → hiroshiyoshimura.bandcamp.com/